FerrumFortis
Trump’s Tariff Tumult Rattles Ship Recycling, Currencies & Global Freight
सोमवार, 26 मई 2025
Synopsis: - GMS has launched its new podcast series exploring the Hong Kong Convention’s global impact, while Trump’s new tariffs on India and the EU have shaken currencies, oil futures, and ship recycling markets across Bangladesh, Pakistan, Turkey, and India.
GMS Podcasts Dive into Hong Kong Convention Realities
GMS, the world’s leading cash buyer of ships for recycling, has unveiled a new social media initiative, GMS Podcasts. The launch episode focuses on the Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships, set to be enforced from June 26, 2025. The episode discusses the genesis of the HKC, nations backing the treaty, and implications for ship owners. Platforms like Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube Music, and Podbean will feature this informative series. GMS aims to engage maritime professionals and recyclers in meaningful discourse using advanced AI tools.
Tariff Tensions Escalate Under Trump 2.0
Former U.S. President Donald Trump, now a dominant force again in international politics, has reignited tariff conflicts. This week, he targeted India’s retaliatory tariffs, challenging them at the World Trade Organization. The result? Uneven economic reverberations across the sub-continent. While the Indian Rupee strengthened against the falling $ value, currencies in Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Turkey depreciated. Trump’s sudden imposition of 50% tariffs on EU goods further intensified economic volatility, setting an uncertain tone for international trade over the next 3 years, 8 months, and 1 week.
Currency Volatility Impacts Ship Recycling Regions
The sub-continent’s recycling economies are particularly vulnerable to dollar fluctuations. This week, India gained an edge with the Rupee firming up, but Pakistan’s and Bangladesh’s currencies weakened, hurting buyer confidence. Turkey’s Lira also slumped, but a rare sale this week hinted at some transactional momentum. GMS notes that currency instability, combined with volatile steel plate prices and freight uncertainties, has made the pricing of vessels for recycling more complex and risk-prone than earlier in 2025.
Baltic Exchange Dampens as Dry Freight Softens
The Baltic Exchange Dry Index dropped by approximately 0.1%, reflecting the toll of weak demand and tariff-related freight hesitations. Although larger dry bulk segments posted marginal gains, smaller trading sectors, coasters and handysize vessels, faltered. This underscores a cooling freight market. Some container and tanker segments also saw early signs of softening, potentially triggering an uptick in tonnage available for recycling in the second half of 2025.
Oil Prices Retreat Despite Late Week Rebound
Oil futures experienced a turbulent week. The price per barrel declined steadily across the trading week due to cooling global trade sentiment, only to register a late-week recovery. Nevertheless, the final price closed lower at $61.50/barrel. Weaker oil demand puts additional pressure on shipping markets and fuels pessimism about maritime profitability through 2025.
Bangladesh: HKC Implementation Brings Teething Woes
Bangladesh, a key player in ship recycling, is currently grappling with post-HKC transition challenges. Only nine yards in the country have received HKC certification and are allowed to obtain No Objection Certificates for importing vessels. At least 20 other yards are scrambling to upgrade their infrastructure before June 26th. The delay is not only creating a bottleneck in available yard capacity but also affecting vessel supply and pricing.
Pakistan Lags Behind as Gadani Falls Silent
Pakistan continues to lag in HKC readiness. None of the yards in Gadani, the country’s main recycling hub, are HKC-certified, leaving the market unable to import vessels under the new regime. The yard remains largely empty, with buyers unable to match competitive pricing seen in other sub-continent nations. While some infrastructure discussions are reportedly underway, no major upgrades have begun, adding to Pakistan’s woes just as demand could potentially surge post-HKC enforcement.
India Stays Resilient, Turkey Reports a Rare Sale
India, already home to HKC-certified facilities in Alang, is better prepared for the upcoming regulatory changes. While market sentiment remains cautious due to currency and price volatility, India has not seen the same operational disruptions as Bangladesh or Pakistan. Meanwhile, Turkey, usually quiet in the current market climate, managed to report a rare sale this week, hinting at isolated sparks of market activity. However, Turkish buyers still struggle with weaker Lira performance and stringent EU environmental scrutiny.
Key Takeaways
GMS launched GMS Podcasts to explain the HKC enforcement beginning June 26, 2025, across ship recycling markets.
Trump's tariff measures on India and the EU caused global market and currency fluctuations, impacting oil and freight indices.
Bangladesh faces post-HKC delays, Pakistan has no certified yards, while India & Turkey show relative market resilience.
